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Raymond Hains: Art Speculator
 
November 5–December 15, 2002
Paley and Levy Galleries
Moore College of Art and Design
20th Street & The Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103
Conceived by the Centre Pompidou, Musée National d’Art Moderne-Centre de Création Industrielle, Paris, and its curator for contemporary art, Christine Macel; organized by the Goldie Paley Gallery

Schedule of Events:

  • Opening Reception (Friday, November 8)
  • Gallery talk by Christine Macel
  • Symposium: “Raymond Hains: The Aesthetics of Coincidence”
    Symposium details
    Links
    Acknowledgements
  • The Galleries at Moore are pleased to present “Raymond Hains: Art Speculator“—fifth in the Moore International Discovery Series.

    Spanning more than five decades, Raymond Hains’s work has been widely exhibited in museums and galleries throughout Europe, yet it remains virtually unknown in the United States. Born in 1926 in Brittany, Hains first expressed himself artistically in photography. From his “hypnagogic photographs” to the presentation of torn street posters and palissades, his technique for appropriating and recontextualizing the found object has evolved to include sources both written and visual. Juggling words and images, Hains pairs a giant mannequin of Paris gallerist Iris Clert in Kassel with similar figures made in the small French village of Cassel (Iris Clert, la messagère des arts, 1997), and, invoking an archaic Roman name for Brittany, he transforms the American Express logo (Armorican Express, 1987). It is less a matter of simple wordplay than of disruptive intervention. The pun, often deemed a lowly form of humor, is recast as a secret, fertile catalyst, stimulating viewers’ imaginations by way of memory or experience.

    His vast erudition enables Hains to weave together scholarly references with the places, people, and facts of ordinary life. “I work with a kind of Web,” he remarks today, a reference to his recent Internet projects and an apt metaphor summarizing the varied production of his career. Hains is most often associated with France’s Nouveau Réalisme, a loose collaborative formed in 1960 by Hains, Yves Klein, César, Jacques Villeglé, Arman, Jean Tinguely, and Martial Raysse. Considered a precursor to American pop art, these new realists embraced the found object and the rapidly developing technologies that shaped postwar society.

    Salient pieces from every period of Hains’s career are included in the exhibition, with deliberate juxtapositions that link early and recent works. The play with language, the penchant for punning, and the enormous literary and historical bank from which Hains unceasingly draws have at times obscured the eminently visual character of his work. It is precisely this aesthetic dimension that “Raymond Hains: Art Speculator” seeks to underscore—not only the artist’s invention of forms and the plurality of his materials but his role as a scopic interpreter of signs inscribed in the landscape. For younger generations of artists seeking independence from the institutionalized art world, Hains’s unconventional methodologies and unpredictable oeuvre continue to challenge, inspire, fascinate, and, often, delight.

    An illustrated catalog is available.

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    The Moore International Discovery Series was inaugurated in 1992 to introduce important international artists to American audiences. Previous honorees include Terry Fox, Jean-Frédéric Schnyder, Roman Signer, and VALIE EXPORT. Raymond Hains was selected by a panel of four prominent international curators: Lynne Cooke, curator, Dia Center for the Arts, New York; Robert Fleck, director of the École Régionale des Beaux-Arts, Nantes, France; Ulrich Loock, director, Kunstmuseum Luzern, Switzerland; and Marjory Jacobson, author and curatorial consultant, Boston.

    Links

    Gallery hours
    Tuesday through Friday 11am - 7pm
    Saturday 11am - 5pm
    Closed on all academic and legal holidays

    Admission
    Free

    Contact
    215.965.4027 / fax 215.568.5921
    galleries@moore.edu
    www.thegalleriesatmoore.org
    www.moore.edu